To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Editorials page 2
Art r ea-tures ***3 p,K, g
SP*"*. p«g»7
Etceteras pan 7,8
This Is The Pitta :7%ag«2
Spring Dance Concert pact 3
TheB-52's paget
Spring Sporti Near End page 7
Jon Henaley won the Student Government presidential
runoff against Mike Bellamy in elections held last Wed-nesday
and Thursday. Hensley and other newly elected of-ficials
will be sworn in at a banquet Wednesday evening.
The Carolinian Non-profit
US.Postage
PAID
Greensboro. N.C.
Permit No. 30
"Serving the academic community since 1897.
April 20,1(62 V LX1 Number 48 The University of North Carolina at Greeasbara Have a story idea? Call us at 379-5041.
~TT
Photo fry Boo Com*
At the Academic Computer (enter, students use video ter-minals
to complete class assignments (above). Computer ter-minals
are used throughout the campus in a variety of
academic departments.
Falkland* Crisis
Settlement Near
A final draft of the latest proposal
to settle the conflict between
Britain and Argentina over the
Falkland Islands is nearing com-pletion,
according to a member of
the ruling military junta.
Secretary of State Alexander Haig has been meeting with Argen-tina
negotiators for over two weeks to settle who has sovereignty
rm the islands, ruled by Dritain for 149 years and seized by Argen-une
troops on April 2.
Government sources said Sunday that Argentina rejected any
proposal that did not recognize its sovereignty over the islands 260
miles off the nation's southern coast. Argentine Foreign Minister
Nicanor Costa Mendez said, "We still believe tliat negotiation is bet-ter
than war and we're putting all our efforts behind the talks."
American Businesses Failing Faster
The number of American businesses that failed in the first 14
weeks of 1982 is up more than 50 percent from the same period
last year, according to figures released by Dun & Bradstreet, a
leading financial reporting service. And, more importantly, the
failure rate could get worse.
According to the figures, 6,205. companies, equaling 83
businesses per 10,000, have closed their doors, in the first 3"A
months of this year. The rate is the highest since the Great
Depression, when 100 businesses per 10,000 were shutting
down.
And a leading economist estimated that approximately 26,000
businesses would fold this year, about 9,000 more than in 1981.
Marchers Heading For Washington
Voting rights marchers left Tuskegee, Alabama yesterday to
begin a 750-mile trip to Washington, D.C. to urge a stronger
federal Voting Rights Act. The 1965 Voting Rights Act, which
struck down many voting barriers for blacks, is under review by
Congress. The Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Atlanta-based
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said the five-state
journey will end in Washington in late June "in time for
the Senate vote on the Voting Rights Act."
Some confrontations with the Ku Klux Klan are expected.
"We'll be marching in some new territory when we get into the
Carolinas," said Lowery. "I don't know what we might face."
The Revolution
Computers Lead To Better Pay
By SELBY BATEMAN
UNC-GNmnB«nM
To some college students,
today's computer revolution
represent* little more than video
games and 24-hour banking.
However, a growing number are
finding that despite a troubled
economy, the computer field is a
doorway to high-paying jobs and a
variety of career opportunities.
"When you're thinking of
moving into the computer world
today so far as business is concer-ned,
you have a wide open oppor-tunity
for employment,' said Dr.
James Crews, head of the Depar-tment
of Business and Distributive
Education in the School of
Business and Economics at the
University of North Carolina at
Greensboro.
That optimistic attitude is
echoed by Dr. Michael Willett, who
directs UNC-G's computer science
concentration in the Department
of Mathematics, who noted,
"We've had students start for as
much as $22,000 a year, after
leaving our program"
The computer science field,
stated one national magazine
recently, is "the hot profession of
the '80a. If you can keep up with
the technology, you'll get way
ahead in salary and job security "
Entry-level salaries are attrac-tive,
positions in a variety of fields
are plentiful and opportunities for
advancement are generally good
for those with talent.
A U.S. Department of Labor
survey taken within the last year
reported the median beginning
computer programmer's salary in
the Greensboro area to be $17,200,
a sum that will vary depending on
the company and the individual. A
systems analyst with several years
of experience could expect to start
for as much as $29,500 in the
Greensboro area, the survey con-cluded.
Salaries in the field climb much
higher as responsibilities increase,
with a director of business data
processing earning up to $36,000
or more and higher positions
requiring even greater salaries,
noted Crews.
Such job opportunities have
helped fuel a computer boom at
UNC-G as well as at other leading
educational institutions.
With a growth rate little short of
phenomenal, computer use among
students is touching virtually
every academic department. Lines
of students form to register for
computer courses. UNC-G
recruiters face a rising tide of
questions from high school seniors
eager to learn of computer of-ferings.
Terms such as byte,
microchip, ROM, disk drive and
BASIC are slipping into collegiate
conversations.
Beale Authors
New Textbook
Dr. Walter H. Beale, an
associate professor of English at
the University of North Carolina
at Greensboro, has written a 468-
page book entitled "Real Writing
With Stylistic Optiona."
Published recently by Scott
Foresman & Co., the volume has
been adopted by several major
state universities for use in their
freshman English classes.
The book also has been divided
and published in two paperback
editions, the 332-page "Real
Writing" and 206-page
"Stylistic Options." The latter
volume was co-authored with
Beale by Karen L. Meyers, direc-tor
of the writing program in the
UNC-G Office of Special Services,
and Laurie L. White, a doctoral
student in the Department of
English.
"Real Writing is primarily a
rhetoric book covering essay
writing techniques," said Beale,
"while 'Stylistic Options' is a sen-tence
and paragraph exercise
book."
Beale, a past winner of UNC-G's
Alumni Teaching Excellence
Award, has been a faculty member
at the Greensboro campus since
1971. A graduate of Wake Forest
University, he received his M.A.
and Ph.D. degrees from the
University of Michigan.
A native of Roseboro, Beale is
the author of a book, "Old and
Middle English Poetry: A Guide to
Information Sources." He
specializes in linguistics and
medieval literature.
Counselors Taking
Guild Applications
The prestigious International
Academy of Professional Coun-seling
and Psychotherapy
(I.A.P.C.P.) is now accepting ap-plications
for membership from
highly qualified undergraduate
and graduate students.
The Academy Is a multi-disciplinary,
international
organization dedicated to the
worldwide pursuit of excellence in
counseling and psychotherapy. It
numbers, among its diplomats,
many of the leaders and in-novators
within the counseling and
psychotherapy professions.
Requirements for student mem-bership
include a minimum of 45
undergraduate credits, a B
average or higher and appropriate
faculty recommendations.
Benefits of student membership
generally include certificate,
listing in an international direc-tory,
periodic newsletters, an-nouncements
of workshops and
training programs and graduate
school placement information.
Student membership in IAPCP
should be of particular interest and
benefit to individuals considering a
career in psychology, medicine,
social work, guidance or related
mental health or health care fields.
For additional information and
application materials, please con-tact
The Academy, Student Mem-bership
Division, 2036 Blairmore
Road, Lexington, Kentucky
40502, U.S.A., (516) 546-6646.
The flourishing of the computer
takes many forms, and UNC-G's
campus is alive with a variety of
computer users: A business and
distributive education major types
a class assignment onto a com-puter
keyboard as the video
display terminal before her lights
up with the answer from the
Academic Computer Center's
VAX U/780 system.
Members of math classes watch
two closed-circuit television
screens intently as a computer-generated
numerical analysis is
explained.
In a physics class, students com-pare
data on star images collected
by low-light level television at the
Three College Observatory, stored
on computer disk and analyzed
through the VAX system.
"We have over 100 persons
following the business data
processing program and 40 to 60
students in the revised office
systems administration concen-tration
now," added Crews. It is
within UNC-G's School of
Business and Economics that in-struction
in business-related com-puter
education is assigned.
The computer science concen-tration
in the Department of
Mathematics has teen a similar
surge of interest. "We've had a
tremendous jump in the number of
students declaring for our concen-tration
in computer science," said
Willett. "There's probably more
growth in general computer use on
this campus than in any other
area."
Interest in computers also is
being felt in the field of education
itself. One course popular with
state educators is "Microcom-puters
in Education," taught in
the Microcomputing Lab of UNC-G's
School of Education.
"All of a sudden, the whole thing
is taking off," said Dr. Theodore
Mines, a professor who teaches the
course. "Schools that a year ago
were lukewarm toward microcom-puters
are now madly scrambling
to find money for them."
The $319,000 VAX 11/780 com-puter
system, located in the
Academic Computer Center in the
School of Business and Economics
building, is the heart of academic
computer use at UNC-G. Four
satellite centers on other parts of
campus connect with the VAX
system and a fifth satellite center
is planned. In addition, the
Academic Computer Center is tied
into the powerful IBM computer
system at the Triangle Univer-sities
Computation Center, located
at the Research Triangle Park
some 60 miles east of the UNC-G
campus.
Or. Theodore W. Hildebrandt,
director of the Academic Com-puter
Center, offers on-the-job
training for a substantial number
of students through work-study
arrangements or by employing ad-vanced
computer students as
study consultants for beginning
students.
"There is no school on campus in
which the faculty and students are
not using the VAX computer,"
said Dr. Hildebrandt.
Closely watching the expansion
is Dr. Stanley L. Jones, vice chan-cellor
for academic affairs, who
has long had an interest in the use
of computers in education. "What
we've seen is that 10 years ago the
administration was scrambling to
develop computer resources while
we found ourselves urging in-creased
faculty interest in com-puters
and in their use in teaching
and research.
"Today, we're still scrambling to
find adequate computer resour-ces,"
he said with a smile, "in a
framework in which the faculty is
pushing us."
Computer development and use
at UNC-G is now "a high priority
item and it will continue to be,"
added Dr. Jones. "It is the respon-sibility
of the University to provide
learning opportunities for studen-ts
to enable them to move into
positions available in today's
society that have grown out of the
new computer technology.
"We realize that if students are
to accomplish this, we must give a
major priority to computer resour-
(Continued on Page 3)
•rAfeft
Tom Chapin (above) and Gaston (below) entertain the crowds
Sunday afternoon in the Quad during Spring Fling. More
photos on pages 4 and 5.

NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material.

Editorials page 2
Art r ea-tures ***3 p,K, g
SP*"*. p«g»7
Etceteras pan 7,8
This Is The Pitta :7%ag«2
Spring Dance Concert pact 3
TheB-52's paget
Spring Sporti Near End page 7
Jon Henaley won the Student Government presidential
runoff against Mike Bellamy in elections held last Wed-nesday
and Thursday. Hensley and other newly elected of-ficials
will be sworn in at a banquet Wednesday evening.
The Carolinian Non-profit
US.Postage
PAID
Greensboro. N.C.
Permit No. 30
"Serving the academic community since 1897.
April 20,1(62 V LX1 Number 48 The University of North Carolina at Greeasbara Have a story idea? Call us at 379-5041.
~TT
Photo fry Boo Com*
At the Academic Computer (enter, students use video ter-minals
to complete class assignments (above). Computer ter-minals
are used throughout the campus in a variety of
academic departments.
Falkland* Crisis
Settlement Near
A final draft of the latest proposal
to settle the conflict between
Britain and Argentina over the
Falkland Islands is nearing com-pletion,
according to a member of
the ruling military junta.
Secretary of State Alexander Haig has been meeting with Argen-tina
negotiators for over two weeks to settle who has sovereignty
rm the islands, ruled by Dritain for 149 years and seized by Argen-une
troops on April 2.
Government sources said Sunday that Argentina rejected any
proposal that did not recognize its sovereignty over the islands 260
miles off the nation's southern coast. Argentine Foreign Minister
Nicanor Costa Mendez said, "We still believe tliat negotiation is bet-ter
than war and we're putting all our efforts behind the talks."
American Businesses Failing Faster
The number of American businesses that failed in the first 14
weeks of 1982 is up more than 50 percent from the same period
last year, according to figures released by Dun & Bradstreet, a
leading financial reporting service. And, more importantly, the
failure rate could get worse.
According to the figures, 6,205. companies, equaling 83
businesses per 10,000, have closed their doors, in the first 3"A
months of this year. The rate is the highest since the Great
Depression, when 100 businesses per 10,000 were shutting
down.
And a leading economist estimated that approximately 26,000
businesses would fold this year, about 9,000 more than in 1981.
Marchers Heading For Washington
Voting rights marchers left Tuskegee, Alabama yesterday to
begin a 750-mile trip to Washington, D.C. to urge a stronger
federal Voting Rights Act. The 1965 Voting Rights Act, which
struck down many voting barriers for blacks, is under review by
Congress. The Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Atlanta-based
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said the five-state
journey will end in Washington in late June "in time for
the Senate vote on the Voting Rights Act."
Some confrontations with the Ku Klux Klan are expected.
"We'll be marching in some new territory when we get into the
Carolinas," said Lowery. "I don't know what we might face."
The Revolution
Computers Lead To Better Pay
By SELBY BATEMAN
UNC-GNmnB«nM
To some college students,
today's computer revolution
represent* little more than video
games and 24-hour banking.
However, a growing number are
finding that despite a troubled
economy, the computer field is a
doorway to high-paying jobs and a
variety of career opportunities.
"When you're thinking of
moving into the computer world
today so far as business is concer-ned,
you have a wide open oppor-tunity
for employment,' said Dr.
James Crews, head of the Depar-tment
of Business and Distributive
Education in the School of
Business and Economics at the
University of North Carolina at
Greensboro.
That optimistic attitude is
echoed by Dr. Michael Willett, who
directs UNC-G's computer science
concentration in the Department
of Mathematics, who noted,
"We've had students start for as
much as $22,000 a year, after
leaving our program"
The computer science field,
stated one national magazine
recently, is "the hot profession of
the '80a. If you can keep up with
the technology, you'll get way
ahead in salary and job security "
Entry-level salaries are attrac-tive,
positions in a variety of fields
are plentiful and opportunities for
advancement are generally good
for those with talent.
A U.S. Department of Labor
survey taken within the last year
reported the median beginning
computer programmer's salary in
the Greensboro area to be $17,200,
a sum that will vary depending on
the company and the individual. A
systems analyst with several years
of experience could expect to start
for as much as $29,500 in the
Greensboro area, the survey con-cluded.
Salaries in the field climb much
higher as responsibilities increase,
with a director of business data
processing earning up to $36,000
or more and higher positions
requiring even greater salaries,
noted Crews.
Such job opportunities have
helped fuel a computer boom at
UNC-G as well as at other leading
educational institutions.
With a growth rate little short of
phenomenal, computer use among
students is touching virtually
every academic department. Lines
of students form to register for
computer courses. UNC-G
recruiters face a rising tide of
questions from high school seniors
eager to learn of computer of-ferings.
Terms such as byte,
microchip, ROM, disk drive and
BASIC are slipping into collegiate
conversations.
Beale Authors
New Textbook
Dr. Walter H. Beale, an
associate professor of English at
the University of North Carolina
at Greensboro, has written a 468-
page book entitled "Real Writing
With Stylistic Optiona."
Published recently by Scott
Foresman & Co., the volume has
been adopted by several major
state universities for use in their
freshman English classes.
The book also has been divided
and published in two paperback
editions, the 332-page "Real
Writing" and 206-page
"Stylistic Options." The latter
volume was co-authored with
Beale by Karen L. Meyers, direc-tor
of the writing program in the
UNC-G Office of Special Services,
and Laurie L. White, a doctoral
student in the Department of
English.
"Real Writing is primarily a
rhetoric book covering essay
writing techniques," said Beale,
"while 'Stylistic Options' is a sen-tence
and paragraph exercise
book."
Beale, a past winner of UNC-G's
Alumni Teaching Excellence
Award, has been a faculty member
at the Greensboro campus since
1971. A graduate of Wake Forest
University, he received his M.A.
and Ph.D. degrees from the
University of Michigan.
A native of Roseboro, Beale is
the author of a book, "Old and
Middle English Poetry: A Guide to
Information Sources." He
specializes in linguistics and
medieval literature.
Counselors Taking
Guild Applications
The prestigious International
Academy of Professional Coun-seling
and Psychotherapy
(I.A.P.C.P.) is now accepting ap-plications
for membership from
highly qualified undergraduate
and graduate students.
The Academy Is a multi-disciplinary,
international
organization dedicated to the
worldwide pursuit of excellence in
counseling and psychotherapy. It
numbers, among its diplomats,
many of the leaders and in-novators
within the counseling and
psychotherapy professions.
Requirements for student mem-bership
include a minimum of 45
undergraduate credits, a B
average or higher and appropriate
faculty recommendations.
Benefits of student membership
generally include certificate,
listing in an international direc-tory,
periodic newsletters, an-nouncements
of workshops and
training programs and graduate
school placement information.
Student membership in IAPCP
should be of particular interest and
benefit to individuals considering a
career in psychology, medicine,
social work, guidance or related
mental health or health care fields.
For additional information and
application materials, please con-tact
The Academy, Student Mem-bership
Division, 2036 Blairmore
Road, Lexington, Kentucky
40502, U.S.A., (516) 546-6646.
The flourishing of the computer
takes many forms, and UNC-G's
campus is alive with a variety of
computer users: A business and
distributive education major types
a class assignment onto a com-puter
keyboard as the video
display terminal before her lights
up with the answer from the
Academic Computer Center's
VAX U/780 system.
Members of math classes watch
two closed-circuit television
screens intently as a computer-generated
numerical analysis is
explained.
In a physics class, students com-pare
data on star images collected
by low-light level television at the
Three College Observatory, stored
on computer disk and analyzed
through the VAX system.
"We have over 100 persons
following the business data
processing program and 40 to 60
students in the revised office
systems administration concen-tration
now," added Crews. It is
within UNC-G's School of
Business and Economics that in-struction
in business-related com-puter
education is assigned.
The computer science concen-tration
in the Department of
Mathematics has teen a similar
surge of interest. "We've had a
tremendous jump in the number of
students declaring for our concen-tration
in computer science," said
Willett. "There's probably more
growth in general computer use on
this campus than in any other
area."
Interest in computers also is
being felt in the field of education
itself. One course popular with
state educators is "Microcom-puters
in Education," taught in
the Microcomputing Lab of UNC-G's
School of Education.
"All of a sudden, the whole thing
is taking off," said Dr. Theodore
Mines, a professor who teaches the
course. "Schools that a year ago
were lukewarm toward microcom-puters
are now madly scrambling
to find money for them."
The $319,000 VAX 11/780 com-puter
system, located in the
Academic Computer Center in the
School of Business and Economics
building, is the heart of academic
computer use at UNC-G. Four
satellite centers on other parts of
campus connect with the VAX
system and a fifth satellite center
is planned. In addition, the
Academic Computer Center is tied
into the powerful IBM computer
system at the Triangle Univer-sities
Computation Center, located
at the Research Triangle Park
some 60 miles east of the UNC-G
campus.
Or. Theodore W. Hildebrandt,
director of the Academic Com-puter
Center, offers on-the-job
training for a substantial number
of students through work-study
arrangements or by employing ad-vanced
computer students as
study consultants for beginning
students.
"There is no school on campus in
which the faculty and students are
not using the VAX computer,"
said Dr. Hildebrandt.
Closely watching the expansion
is Dr. Stanley L. Jones, vice chan-cellor
for academic affairs, who
has long had an interest in the use
of computers in education. "What
we've seen is that 10 years ago the
administration was scrambling to
develop computer resources while
we found ourselves urging in-creased
faculty interest in com-puters
and in their use in teaching
and research.
"Today, we're still scrambling to
find adequate computer resour-ces,"
he said with a smile, "in a
framework in which the faculty is
pushing us."
Computer development and use
at UNC-G is now "a high priority
item and it will continue to be,"
added Dr. Jones. "It is the respon-sibility
of the University to provide
learning opportunities for studen-ts
to enable them to move into
positions available in today's
society that have grown out of the
new computer technology.
"We realize that if students are
to accomplish this, we must give a
major priority to computer resour-
(Continued on Page 3)
•rAfeft
Tom Chapin (above) and Gaston (below) entertain the crowds
Sunday afternoon in the Quad during Spring Fling. More
photos on pages 4 and 5.